3K 4K 2K - People Pages
Transcription
3K 4K 2K - People Pages
T ORRES R UNS T O H ISTORIC W IN Indiana State University - Nov. 26, 2002 Jorge Torres' triumph in the 2002 NCAA Cross Country race lifts him into an elite group of American harrier champions. Torres prevailed over Kenyans Boaz Cheboiywo - the defending champion, and David Kimani - who won the 1999 title, and Arkansas' Irishman Alistair Cragg - the 2002 NCAA Indoor 5,000 meter champion. His hard-earned victory ranks high amongst the meet's best competitions. Jorge Torres takes us through this thrilling fourway duel in his own words. JORGE TORRES TAKES DOWN THREE NCAA CHAMPIONS 2K "Finally I'm here in my last cross country race for Colorado. I was ready to go 4:20, 4:18 whatever last year was, I was ready to do it. When I heard 4:35, I thought that these guys were going to play conservative because they knew that there were four tough racers that were all ready to race In the second mile, Boaz made the initial move to try and drop the pack, and I wasn't going to let anyone get a step ahead of me and I responded. I remember Boaz looking over at me a couple of times, and I didn't want to show any kind of strain. I relaxed myself to show these guys that I was in shape and going to respond to every move." 3K Boaz Cheboiywo (202) leads the break from the chase pack in the 3rd K. Jorge Torres (156), David Kimani (4), and Alistair Cragg cover the move. 4K P HOTO R ACE R EPORT by S EAN H ARTNETT www.uwec.edu/hartnesg "Boaz surged and I surged with him and then there was four of us and I knew that is was going to be a battle. Everybody was hurting, going through the same pain. Going through 5K, I was thinking that the pace is hard and that someone is going to have to give up pretty soon. I put in a little surge on the downhill past 5K and I remember getting a step on Boaz, and Kimani was running next to me. At about the 6 kilometer mark Boaz started to fade and it was down to Kimani and Cragg and myself, and I was think OK we got one down, and two more to go. I put in a surge between 6 and 7K, and it ended up dropping Kimani, and Cragg pulled up next to me and he started to surge. By the 7K mark it was just the two of us. I'm thinking that we dropped the two Kenyans, the two guys that I thought would be the main competition, and now I have Alistair Cragg who is a four-minute miler."